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Robert silverberg gilgamesh
Robert silverberg gilgamesh












robert silverberg gilgamesh robert silverberg gilgamesh

Neil Gaiman reviewed Gilgamesh the King for Imagine magazine, and stated that "A fascinating look at a long-gone culture, with a magnificent Jim Burns cover." ĭave Langford reviewed Gilgamesh the King for White Dwarf #69, and stated that "Silverberg's version is laudable, essential reading but his realistic approach weakens (I think) the theme of immortality. Silverberg afterwards wrote a number of stories for the fantasy anthology series Heroes in Hell describing Gilgamesh's posthumous adventures in the underworld, including the award-winning novella Gilgamesh in the Outback. When in time Dumuzi dies, Gilgamesh comes back to the kingdom to be proclaimed. When the king of Uruk (his father) dies, Gilgamesh is exiled by the recently crowned Dumuzi, jealous of his skills and power. Gilgamesh is a giant among men and an amazing warrior, even since he was very young.

robert silverberg gilgamesh

But the events are portrayed in a fairly realistic manner. The novel is told from the point of view of Gilgamesh, and is primarily ambivalent about the supernatural elements of the epic. In the afterword the author wrote "at all times I have attempted to interpret the fanciful and fantastic events of these poems in a realistic way, that is, to tell the story of Gilgamesh as though he were writing his own memoirs, and to that end I have introduced many interpretations of my own devising which for better or for worse are in no way to be ascribed to the scholars". Gilgamesh the King is a 1984 historical novel by American writer Robert Silverberg, presenting the Epic of Gilgamesh as a novel.














Robert silverberg gilgamesh